The 6-Mark Ceiling: Navigating Multi-Part Prompts
In IB Economics Paper 1, many candidates unknowingly cap their marks before they even finish their first paragraph. In Part (a) questions (worth 10 marks), the prompt frequently asks you to explain two distinct determinants or benefits—for example, explaining two non-price determinants that could increase market supply, or two determinants of consumption. If you only explain one, the markscheme imposes a strict maximum ceiling of 6 out of 10 marks.
To avoid this, use a clear structural division in your writing. Use signposting words like 'The first determinant...' and 'The second determinant...'. Always define key terms in bold at the start, and ensure your diagrams directly support both explained concepts. If the prompt has a dual focus (such as analyzing substitutes and necessities), your essay must balance both aspects equally.
The Double-Label Trap: Absolute Precision on Your Axes
Diagrams are the currency of IB Economics, but examiners report that thousands of marks are lost annually to lazy or incomplete labeling. A generic vertical axis labeled 'P' and a horizontal axis labeled 'Q' will instantly cost you marks on specialized diagrams.
- Exchange Rate Diagrams: The vertical axis must be labeled with the relative exchange rate values, such as 'Price of ARS in USD' or 'USD per Argentine Peso (ARS)'. Writing a generic 'Price' or 'P' is incorrect.
- AD/AS Diagrams: The vertical axis must show 'Average Price Level' or 'Price Level', and the horizontal axis must show 'Real GDP' or 'Real National Output'. Never use generic 'Price' and 'Quantity' here.
- International Trade and Tariffs: The world supply line must be clearly labeled as \( S_{world} \) or \( P_{world} \), and you must show the new horizontal supply line after the tariff as \( S_{world} + \text{Tariff} \).
- Production Possibilities Curves (PPC): Label axes with specific competing goods or categories (e.g., 'Consumer Goods' and 'Capital Goods') instead of generic 'X' and 'Y'.
Additionally, when illustrating government policies, do not leave your diagram static. If the question involves a subsidy, you must clearly shade or delineate the total cost of the subsidy to the government (the rectangle representing the subsidy per unit multiplied by the total quantity produced). If illustrating negative externalities, ensure the welfare loss triangle points directly toward the socially optimum output level \( Q^* \).
The 15-Mark Crucible: Structuring Your Synthesis
The 15-mark questions—Part (b) in Paper 1 and Part (g) in Paper 2—are where Level 7s are made or broken. Too many students write a simple 'pros and cons' list and expect high marks. To reach the top markbands, your response must be an integrated, evaluative synthesis.
| Step | Phase | Execution Checklist |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Define & Diagram | Define key terms immediately. Draw a flawless, fully labeled diagram showing shifts and equilibria. |
| 2 | Theoretical Analysis | Explain the step-by-step transmission mechanism of the policy, linking it directly to your diagram. Use economic models (e.g., how expansionary monetary policy drops interest rates, boosting \( I \) and \( C \), shifting \( AD \) right). |
| 3 | Real-World Evidence | Integrate specific, named, and contextualized real-world cases (e.g., Argentina's 2023 currency reforms or Papua New Guinea's extraction-sector taxes). Avoid generic examples like 'in Africa' or hypothetical firms. Missing real-world examples caps you at a maximum of 9 out of 15 marks. |
| 4 | Balanced Evaluation | Appraise strengths and limitations. Assess impacts on different stakeholders (consumers, producers, government, and society). Address the short-run versus long-run trade-offs, and consider alternative policies (e.g., comparing subsidies to direct provision). |
The 2-Decimal Rule and Missing Units
Paper 2 requires numerical calculation questions where easy marks are routinely lost. You must memorize these two golden rules:
Show Your Working: Even if your final answer is perfectly correct, you will receive zero marks or lose method marks if you do not explicitly write out the formula and intermediate steps. For instance, when calculating the GDP price deflator, write out:
\( \text{GDP Price Deflator} = \frac{\text{Nominal GDP}}{\text{Real GDP}} \times 100 \) before substituting the values.
Never Omit Units: An answer of '1.44' or '24,969.75' without appropriate units will be penalized. Always look at the data tables and append the correct designations (e.g., \( \% \), 'million USD', 'ARS', or 'tons'). If calculating price elasticities (like PED or YED), keep a close eye on your negative signs and ensure you divide the percentage change in quantity by the percentage change in price, not the inverse.